You have noticed something about how your child sees the world. They seem to look past objects rather than at them. They reach for the red toy but ignore the blue one. Bright lights fascinate them, but a busy playroom overwhelms them. Their eye exam came back normal, and yet something is clearly different. What you may be seeing is cortical visual impairment, and understanding it can change everything about how you support your child.

What Is Cortical Visual Impairment (CVI)?

Cortical visual impairment is a brain-based visual disorder in which the eyes are structurally normal and capable of receiving visual information, but the brain has difficulty processing, interpreting, and making sense of what the eyes see. It is caused by damage to the visual processing areas of the brain (primarily the occipital lobes and visual pathways), the same type of injury that causes cerebral palsy.

CVI is the leading cause of visual impairment in children in developed countries, surpassing all eye-based conditions combined. Studies estimate that 60 to 70% of children with CP have some degree of visual impairment, with CVI being the most common type.

CVI is not blindness. Children with CVI have visual potential. Because the issue is in the brain, not the eyes, and because the brain has neuroplasticity (especially in early childhood), many children with CVI can significantly improve their functional vision with structured intervention.

The 10 Characteristics of CVI

Dr. Christine Roman-Lantzy identified 10 characteristic behaviors that help clinicians and parents recognize CVI and distinguish it from eye-based vision problems:

#CharacteristicWhat It Looks Like
1Color preferenceChild responds more to specific colors (often red or yellow) than others
2Need for movementChild notices moving objects more easily than stationary ones
3Visual latencyDelayed response when looking at objects; may take several seconds to “see”
4Visual field preferencesChild consistently uses one area of their visual field better than others
5Difficulty with distanceChild sees objects close up better than far away
6Visual complexity issuesOverwhelmed by busy patterns, cluttered backgrounds, or crowded environments
7Light-gazing or light aversionDrawn to lights compulsively or avoids bright environments
8Difficulty with noveltyResponds better to familiar objects than new ones; needs repeated exposure
9Absence of visually guided reachDoes not look at objects while reaching for them (looks, then reaches, or reaches without looking)
10Fluctuating visual functionVision appears to change based on fatigue, illness, environment, and complexity
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How CVI Is Diagnosed

CVI diagnosis requires two things: a normal or near-normal eye exam (confirming the eyes are not the primary problem) and a functional vision assessment by a teacher of the visually impaired (TVI) using the CVI Range assessment tool. The CVI Range, developed by Roman-Lantzy, scores the severity of each characteristic on a scale from Phase I (most impaired) to Phase III (most resolved), guiding intervention priorities.

Many children with CP have CVI that goes undiagnosed because their eye exam is normal and clinicians do not screen for brain-based vision problems. If your child shows any of the 10 characteristics above, request a CVI evaluation.

Supporting Your Child at Home

Environmental adaptations

  • Reduce visual clutter. Present objects against a plain, dark (ideally black) background. Clear the visual field of distracting patterns and competing objects.
  • Use your child’s preferred color. Wrap toys or utensils in red or yellow tape. Use colored bowls and cups that stand out against the table.
  • Add movement. Shiny or reflective objects that catch light, mobiles, and gently moving toys may be easier for your child to see.
  • Allow extra time. Visual latency means your child needs more time to process what they see. Wait 10 to 15 seconds after presenting an object before assuming they have not seen it.
  • Control lighting. Backlighting (placing a light source behind an object) and reducing ambient glare can improve visual attention.

Structured visual programs

A TVI trained in CVI will develop a systematic intervention program that gradually increases visual complexity as your child’s brain learns to process more information. This might include transitioning from single-color objects to multi-color, from simple to patterned backgrounds, from stationary to competing visual stimuli, and from near to distance viewing.

Need Help Accessing Vision Services for Your Child?

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CVI and Education

Children with CVI have the right to vision-related services under IDEA. This includes access to a TVI, materials adapted for their visual needs, and classroom accommodations (simplified visual displays, high-contrast materials, preferred seating, reduced visual clutter). Request a functional vision assessment and CVI evaluation as part of your child’s IEP or IFSP process.

CVI is one of the most treatable forms of visual impairment. Because it is brain-based, and because the young brain has remarkable plasticity, early intervention can produce dramatic improvements in functional vision. The children who benefit most are those whose CVI is identified early and whose families and teams implement structured visual programs consistently.
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